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. 1984 May;20(5):739-45.
doi: 10.1016/0091-3057(84)90193-x.

Anorexia and brain serotonin: development of tolerance to the effects of fenfluramine and quipazine in rats with serotonin-depleting lesions

Anorexia and brain serotonin: development of tolerance to the effects of fenfluramine and quipazine in rats with serotonin-depleting lesions

J Carlton et al. Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 1984 May.

Abstract

The acute and chronic effects of the "serotonergic anorectics" quipazine and dl-fenfluramine were examined in rats with substantial and specific depletions of brain 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) induced by 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine (5,7-DHT). A "dessert" test which did not involve food deprivation was used to assess anorexia. Markedly increased sensitivity to the L-5-HTP-induced behavioral syndrome in 5,7-DHT-lesioned rats indicated postsynaptic 5-HT receptor supersensitivity. We found low (2 mg/kg) and intermediate (5 mg/kg) doses of fenfluramine, a putative presynaptic agent, were more effective in producing anorexia in lesion rats versus controls. A higher dose of fenfluramine (10 mg/kg) was less effective in lesion rats, suggesting that high dose and low dose fenfluramine anorexia are mediated by different mechanisms. We found quipazine, a putative 5-HT postsynaptic agonist, in a dose range of 2-10 mg/kg, to be no more effective in producing anorexia in lesion rats compared to controls. The development of tolerance to both fenfluramine and quipazine anorexia was similar for lesion and control rats showing that an intact brain 5-HT system is not necessary for tolerance. Tolerance to the "behavioral syndrome" induced by high doses of these agents developed rapidly in controls but not at all in lesion rats. This suggests that the behavioral syndrome and anorexia are independent effects of fenfluramine and quipazine. These results also challenge the popular notion that the primary anorectic action of fenfluramine is via brain serotonin.

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